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Love, Bulldaggers, and the Birth of Lesbian Research, 1920s-1930s
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Our Dyke Histories por Jack Gieseking with Sinister Wisdom

Notas del episodio

In this episode of Our Dyke Histories, we continue to follow the astonishing life of Eve Adams into exile — the butch, Jewish, immigrant anarchist who opened Eve’s Hangout, a tea room in 1920s Greenwich Village that became one of the earliest proto–lesbian bars in the United States. Drawing on Jonathan Ned Katz’s groundbreaking research, Jack Jen Gieseking, Katz, and Julie Enszer trace Eve’s friendships with Anias Nin and Henry Miller; her bold self-published book Lesbian Love (about many of her exes, so delightfully gay); and the policewoman who entrapped her, triggering a sensational raid, trial, and her deportation.

We track Eve from New York to Chicago, LA, and back, and finally Paris, ... 

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Palabras clave
lesbian historyqueer historylesbian barsqueer partiesJack GiesekingSinister WisdomLGBTQ barsfeminist historytrans historyqueer geographiesqueer spacesEve AdamsEve’s Hangoutprohibitionqueer archivesJack Jen Giesekingearly lesbian cultureBlack queer womenlesbian spacesqueer geographyJoan NestleLesbian Herstory ArchivesDamenklub Violettalesbian writers1930s queer cultureWorld War IIanti-fascismcensorshipqueer exilequeer expatsParis lesbian history,Paris lesbian historylesbian ParisMae West1920s queer cultureprisonsGreenwich VillageEve Adams’s TearoomEve’sFranceEuropeAuschwitzTea roomsTearoomsEva KotcheverEva KocheverChawa ZłoczowerJulie EnszerEmma GoldmanAlexander BerkmanAnaïs NinJewsPolish JewsNew York CityProhibition queer historyJewish lesbian historyEve’s Hangout Greenwich Villageproto lesbian barLesbian Love 1925 bookbulldaggerLGBTQ persecutiondeportationJonathan Ned KatzHolocaustimmigrantanti-immigrant
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